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Pinterest Gaining Traction For External SEO

Pinterest appears to be gaining traction really quickly right now. If you aren’t familiar with it, it’s a image sharing site which provides theme based “image boards” which people can “pin” items to (think of the old cork bulletin boards people hang on walls and pin photos and pieces of paper to).

It seems unusual to see a new image-sharing type of social media site to be gaining so much ground, and so quickly. This could be happening due to beneficial attention from influential people who may be serving as “mavens” as Malcolm Gladwell describes them. With significant people such as Jeremy Stoppelman (involved in early PayPal, Yelp, etc) as initial investors backing it, it has gotten pretty good industry attention.

Pinterest’s homepage has a toolbar PageRank value of 6 currently, but nearly 16 million pages are indexed! Even more wonderfully from a search marketer’s viewpoint, the dreaded NOFOLLOW tag is not in use as of yet, so links included with images can pass PageRank. For instance, this page of wedding photos contains links which pass PageRank (although, arguably the links could be slightly more optimal if they weren’t opened into new windows with the target=”_blank” parameters in the link tags). Pictures from Pinterest.com are showing up nicely under image search results, too.

According to Google Insights, searches for “Pinterest” have climbed so quickly this year that it’s now on par with searches for “Flickr” and “Picassa”. While searches for the brandname do not equate with traffic/visits to the site, they typically do correlate pretty closely.

Some degree of Pinterest’s success may be attributed to its iPhone app, which has gained over 35,000 votes, and has 4.5 stars, indicating it’s well-liked by users.

The main detraction from the site right now is in terms of motivation — why do users wish to go here, versus merely sharing images in Facebook, Twitter, Flickr — or, even within Google+, for that matter? The main advantage the site has right now seems to be in terms of the user-interface featuring the pinboards, which allow for good browsing, compared with less compelling lists of thumbnails found in most sites.

The site also has a number of significant issues in terms of usability. If you sign up now, you can expect some clunkiness, depending on your browser. However, I would expect these issues to be addressed fairly rapidly.

For SEOs, I recommend that you enjoy the not-yet-NOFOLLOWed status, because it’s certain to come to an end really soon. I might also predict that as it stands now, I think Pinterest might make better longterm sense as a user-interface feature of some other social media service such as Facebook, Twitter, or Google Plus. It might make for a very good acquisition for one of those services.

Amazing write-up about Pinterest and SEO. I am not sure how valuable it will be for link building since the search engines could just go through and write an exception to not allow value to pass. But it does have other SEO value from a user metrics standpoint. Just found this infographic about Pinterest in my twitter feed and thought it might be something you and your readers would enjoy. It talks about how local businesses can use Pinterest to market their products.

I keep seeing Pinterest mentioned on my G+ Stream that Pinterest has Local SEO value and has potential to rival or even over take Flickr and Photobucket for this reason. Thing is, it seems getting a Pinterest invite is part of the pre-buzz stealth marketing strategy? I vote you put the kibash on that plan and open the gates before we lose interest

I’m not doing promotion work on behalf of Pinterest, if you were suggesting that.

Actually, I don’t mention that it’s beta or only open to invites because I signed up on the site and they pretty promptly gave me access to start using it. Getting an invite doesn’t seem inordinately difficult, thus far.

I’ve used pinterest to optimize my site and the result was amazing my site was jumped from #234 to #9 in few weeks time. The trick is we must got our website pinned and repinned by many people this is the hardest part. Most of pinterest users won’t doing repin when they aren’t like what we pinned. I do simple thing to outsource it on fiverr and got my site pinned by more than 70 people, I don’t know how can he did it just search by typing pinterest on fiverr and you will find it.
As I know currently pinterest is best for SEO for these reason:
1. Once our website pinned it has 3 backlinks counts
2. Google interest in social media signal so it will not tagged as links farm
3. Currently pinterest links are dofollow even the image
4. Also support anchor text, it’s perfect for placing our keywords

It’s interesting how the success of Pintrest is built around Facebook. But regardless, it seems like it is here to stay. If you’re targeting women age 25-50 then you should seriously consider Pintrest.

Also, I have to say I’m a huge fan of their branding efforts. Its a great logo!

I think because Pinterest is essentially a discovery site, it is hard to compare it to other social platforms. The people tend to be enthusiastic and eager to repin quality items. If we look for a purely traffic-generation solution from Pinterest, I think we will be disappointed. If we look at it as a series of “Ahh-ha Moments” and that your product or service might very well be that “Ahh-ha”, we look for better ways to package it for Pinners.